艾滋病毒暴露前预防:生物伦理、临床和流行病学考虑因素

John D. Markley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

公共卫生部门正在广泛推广一种被称为暴露前预防(PrEP)的策略,用于预防高危性行为和注射吸毒中的人体免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)传播。然而,这一策略存在一些未被充分认识到的局限性。本文回顾了支持使用 PrEP 的主要文献,并探讨了与使用 PrEP 相关的意外后果。目前的公共卫生信息显示,PrEP 可将性行为中传播 HIV 的风险降低 99%;然而,这一数字是基于模型而非研究结果得出的,实际疗效可能要低得多。PrEP 与性传播感染率升高、风险补偿、艾滋病抗药性、依从性低和药物副作用有关。为了做出完全知情的决定,医疗专业人员和患者都应了解这些隐患。此外,本文还从天主教的角度探讨了处方 PrEP 所涉及的生物伦理问题。尽管 PrEP 并不总是道德上非法的,但其处方最常见的情况是在生理上属于男性和女性的婚外性活动中使用,这就使处方者与天主教会认为不道德的活动合作。虽然所有追求共同利益的医疗专业人员都应致力于减少艾滋病毒的传播,但并非所有手段在道德上都是合法的。对反对这一策略的医疗专业人员的良心保护变得越来越重要。在考虑 PrEP 时,有必要进行深思熟虑的辨别。摘要:本文中使用的 CDC 资料(图 1)并不意味着 CDC 的认可。这些材料属于公共领域,可在疾病预防控制中心网站上免费获取。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis for HIV: Bioethical, Clinical, and Epidemiological Considerations
Public health authorities are broadly promoting a strategy known as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for the prevention of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission in the context of high-risk sexual activity and injection drug use. However, there are several limitations to this strategy that are underrecognized. This article reviews the primary literature supporting the use of PrEP and explores the unintended consequences associated with its use. Current public health messaging indicates that PrEP reduces the risk of HIV transmission during sex by 99 percent; however, this figure is based on modeling rather than study findings, and real-world efficacy may be significantly lower. PrEP has been associated with increased rates of sexually transmitted infections, risk compensation, HIV drug resistance, low adherence, and drug side effects. To make fully informed decisions, medical professionals and patients should be aware of these pitfalls. Additionally, this article explores the bioethical implications of prescribing PrEP from a Catholic perspective. Although not always morally illicit, PrEP is most often prescribed in the context of sexual activity outside of marriage between a biological male and female, placing the prescriber in cooperation with activity deemed to be immoral by the Catholic Church. While all medical professionals seeking the common good should aim to reduce the transmission of HIV, not all means are morally licit. Conscience protection for medical professionals opposed to this strategy has become increasingly relevant. Thoughtful discernment is necessary when considering PrEP. Summary: The use of CDC material (figure 1) in this article does not imply endorsement by CDC. The material is in the public domain and available on the CDC website free of charge.
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